A sharp drop in German short-term bond yields on Thursday signaled a major repricing of European Central Bank rate expectations, with the 2-year yield posting its biggest decline in weeks.
A sharp drop in German short-term bond yields on Thursday signaled a major repricing of European Central Bank rate expectations, with the 2-year yield posting its biggest decline in weeks.

A sharp drop in German short-term bond yields on Thursday signaled a major repricing of European Central Bank rate expectations, with the 2-year yield posting its biggest decline in weeks.
The German 2-year government bond yield tumbled 6.1 basis points to 2.647% on Thursday, the largest single-session decline in recent weeks, as traders piled into bets that the ECB will ease policy sooner than anticipated. The move marked a decisive break from the range-bound trading that had characterized the front end over the previous month, with the yield closing near the bottom of its 2.691%-2.646% intraday band.
"The front end is pricing in a more aggressive easing cycle as growth concerns take precedence over inflation worries," strategists at ING said in a note. "The curve steepening suggests the market sees rate cuts ahead but expects long-term yields to stay elevated on supply dynamics."
The 10-year Bund yield slipped 0.8 basis point to 3.084%, while the 30-year yield fell 1.5 basis points to 3.626%. The 2/10 spread widened 5.1 basis points to 43.2 basis points, reflecting a bull-steepening pattern where short-dated yields fall faster than long-dated ones. The magnitude of the front-end move — more than seven times the decline in the 10-year — underscored the extent to which the repricing was concentrated in rate expectations rather than growth or inflation premia. The 2-year yield declined steadily through the European afternoon after hitting its session high at 19:29 CET.
The steepening curve has mixed implications for European banks, which typically benefit from wider lending spreads but face pressure if the front-end decline signals a deeper economic slowdown. ING expects the eurozone 10-year yield to hold broadly around the 3% area, with the front end calming on reduced rate-hike pressure. The ECB's next policy decision is scheduled for Sept. 12, and markets will scrutinize the updated staff projections for any downward revision to growth forecasts.
The move extends a broader repricing across core European government bond markets as investors reassess the growth-inflation trade-off. ING's outlook for the second half of 2026 centers on the maintenance of high long-tenor real rates, a curve-steepening tendency on core curves, and stability in Treasury-Bund spreads. The firm sees the US 10-year yield hugging the 4.5% area, with the eurozone 10-year holding broadly around 3%.
The divergence between short and long-dated yields reflects a market grappling with two competing narratives: near-term monetary easing to support flagging growth, versus persistent structural factors — including elevated government debt levels and defense spending needs — that keep long-term borrowing costs elevated. This dynamic is not unique to Europe; Japan's benchmark 10-year bond yield recently hit a 30-year high as investors priced in both inflation and fiscal sustainability concerns, highlighting a global theme of curve steepening across developed markets. In the US, the 5-year area of the curve has turned rich relative to an interpolated line between the 2-year and 10-year rates, a pattern ING says typically emerges when rate hikes are not a dominant force and cuts become more probable.
For currency markets, a steeper German curve and lower front-end yields could weigh on the euro by narrowing the rate differential with the US, though the magnitude of any move will depend on whether the Federal Reserve follows a similar easing path. The euro has already come under pressure this year as the growth differential between the US and eurozone has widened, and any further divergence in monetary policy trajectories could accelerate that trend. ING does not anticipate much variation in Treasury-Bund spreads, suggesting the relative value trade between US and German debt may remain range-bound.
This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute investment advice.